Jub wrote:How about a table leg in a sack? Or does that also require a permit now?
Except that there was never a shotgun involved except in the mind of the person who actually had a gun.
Which is where it matters. The plod were told that bloke was carrying a shotgun. Ergo, as professionals, they had to treat him as though he was. They approached, ordered him to stand still, and he responded by turning towards them and raising what they had been told was a weapon. Based on the information available it was entirely logical for them to consider their lives to be in danger, and to open fire.
I also expect cops to be at the far end of the bell curve when it comes to self sacrifice and self control. That doesn't seem to much to ask of those tasked with carrying weapons and defending the peace.
They were approaching a bloke they'd been told had a firearm, rather than taking the sensible option of running as fast as possible in the opposite direction, because that's what the job they chose required of them. That, in my opinion, takes a lot of bottle. Waiting to get shot before opening fire would have been fucking stupid.
Even with a permit? I understand that the UK does still issue those.
It is possible to apply for a license to own a shotgun, and depending on the details of the license, some may permit said shotgun to be carried on private land (by farmers for pest control is the only reason I can think of for this). You will never get permission to carry a firearm down the high street.
However neither of these people had weapons (the BB gun could be argued, but that's a weak argument at best) and nor is merely carrying a weapon enough to provoke lethal force. Neither of these people did anything to provoke the shots fired at them.
Yes, they did - they pointed objects that the police had reasonable cause to to believe were firearms at the police. The fact that they turned out to be wrong is irrelevant, only that they believed otherwise and had reasonable grounds to do so.
Irbis wrote:It's good thing then competent law enforcement or military training is supposed to quash knee jerk responses and make people respond calmly even under stress instead of spray-and-pray on first sight of danger, then.
The plod did respond calmly. First by ordering the bloke to stop, then with a double-tap. Precisely as he should have done, given the circumstances and the information he'd been given.
Elheru Aran wrote:So unless some way of identifying them is established (a radio tag of some kind perhaps?),
Make them out of brightly coloured plastic (green, red, whatever). The need to avoid confusion between toys and firearms trumps an individual's desire for a realistic imitation.